The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 October 1944 — Page 4

THE DAILY EANMFff/ GREEWCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1944.

CHATEAU IONITE THRU THURSDAY Matinee Tuesday 2 P M. STRICTLY SUPER |er Fun. Romance and Rhythm!

VU.11 JUAN ^ ^BROWN • CARNEY HAN I urn MITCHELL • JEFFREYS

Family (iatli<-rm£ IltiStl At Kerlsville Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Diel of N9rti' Salem R. R. 1 were pleasantly surprised with a group of relatives and friends of Reelsville community Sunday In honor of four birthdays, Bessie Moss, Tommy Dewis Moss, Dorothy Diel and Luella Diel. All enjoyed a tountiful dinner. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Taylor and children, Robert, James, Jene and Benn.e, Mr. and Mrs. Roy John-

^Https Nature Re',eve MONTHLY^ FEMALE PAIN Tou who suffer such pnln with tired, nervous, “draKged out" feelings— all due to functional periodic disturbances—start at once—try Lydia E. Flnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Made especially for women—it /trips nature/ Also a grand stomachic tonic.

Follow label directions.

LVOIfl E. PINKHAM’S compound

I son and children, Angie and Kenneth, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Diel and children, | Charles, and Florence, Mrs. Bessie Moss and children, Sharron Kaye, Tommy Lewis and Anna Marie. Miss ! Mae Almeda Diel of Indianapolis and Mrs. Lula Belle Fisher. The host and i hostess Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Diel I and daughters Luella and Dorthy. GIVES GRAPHIC WAR PICTURE NEW YORK.—A Japanese shell fragment missed penetrating Joe James Custer’s brain by a quarter of an inch. Instead of killing him it cost him an eye and produced the inspiration for one of this war’s most vivid eyewitness books "Through tlie Perilous Night.” ( The injury ended Custer’s career as United Press war correspondent and sent him back to a UP sports beat. His record of the sights, sounds and smells of battle are so graphic they might well discourage other young sports writers from seeking the alleged glamor of covering wan. The book is short, but crammed with a variety of revelations, battles philosophy, humor and the gripping suspense of a writer spending months on a hospital bed wondering if he would be blind, half-blind or wholly sound. Custer describes the Tokyo-bound take-off of Doolittle’s raiders from the Hornet, Adm. Halsey's rise to fame beginning with the first strike at Wake and Marcus, and loss of the cruiser Astoria off Guadalcanal — the sinking in which Custer lost an eye. In the Marcus raid, he relates how carrier pilots after dropping their bombs exchanged radio messages to make the Japanese believe other planes were en route to hit Tokyo and Yokohama -‘‘just u little gag to scare the pants off Tojo.” He passes on an unconfimed story that Adm. Yamamoto himself directed operations in the battle of Midway and went down, on his flagship. He predicts north-south shuttle bombing of Japan an observation made doubly significant by the occupation of Saipan Guadalcanal, he recalls, was finally conquered by “derailment of the Tokyo Express” sinking of Japan-

ese reinforcements speeding for the Solomons, and adds: “The magnitude of the Solomons campaign has never been fully realized. Some day its detailed barbaric history will awe tne civilized Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender Inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. • CREOMULSION For Coughs*Chest Colds. Bronchitis

world. The clock had turned back thousands of years, back to the

primitive, on Guad.”

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In clinical tests conducted by medical doctors more than 100 persons lost 14 to 15 pounds uveraqc in a few weeks with the AYDS Vitamin Candy

Ro ‘

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WHERE ALLIES INVADE ALBANIA

LADY’S STOMACH WAS LIKE A GAS FACTORY; MEALS TURNED TO GAS One lady said recently that her I stomach used to be like a “gas - factory!” That is, when shv ate a j meal it seemed to turn right into i gas. She was always bloated, had ! awful stomach gas pains, daily j headaches and constant irregular ; bbowel action. Now, however, this I lady says she is FREE of STOM- ' ACH GAS and she says the change is due to taking ERB-HELP. Her meals agree with her. No gas or bloat after eating. Headaches and constluation are gone. “Oh! what relief!" states this lady. “Why don’t other gas and constipation sufferers get Erb-Help?” ERB-HELP contain* 12 Great Herbs: they cleanse bowels, clear ! gas from stomach, act on sluggish ■ liver and kidneys. Miserable people | soon feel different all over. So don't • go on suffering! Get ERB-HELP. Sold by all drug stores in Green-

castle.

Plan Rivaled

PERMANENT WAVE ! Do it^yourself. It’s easyputting jpp hhhA | everything you need in the ! CfatdM'vztrs?'** ' Require, no heat or electricity. Safe, far even i type o( hair. Over 0 million Bold. Get tlie amax* Ml Charm-Hurl t’cunaneui Wave Kit today I At Mullins Drug Store, and all ! Drug Stores.

mom. & tueT

THE BRITISH government has made public a tremendous social security plan as an answer, at least in part, to the controversial plan of a year ago formulated by Sir William Beveridge, above. The Beveridge plan will be defended by Its author as parliament convenes after a seven-week vacation, providing Beveridge is successful in his contest for a seat in the House. (International) KANNEU AIVS GET RESULTS

HOW WAR COES IN PACIFIC

Mediterranean Sea

ALLIES HAVE LANDED airborne and seaborne forces on the Albanian mainland (A) in a large-scale overseas operation to speed the liberation of the Nazi-dominated Balkans. The sweep into Albania by the Adriatic army, established four months ago, followed liberation of the central Dalmatian islands (li) off the coast of adjacent Yugoslavia to the north. (International)

IN CEYLON THEY MEET AGAIN c m

AMERICAN OFFICERS, eating in a former German officers' mesa hail in France, arc oblivious to the swastika mural on tlie wall. The mural didn't remain long, however. (International)

M-G-M'i great musical | splosli

AIR POWER continues to dominate the entire theater of war in the Pacific with Allied planes sweeping the southwest area from the Philippines to the Solomons, in powerful smashes at Jap military strength on the islands. A surprise raid on the Jap-held Netherlands East Indies was staged with U. S. planes from Australian bases raiding Batavia, Java, (2) on a 3,200-mile round trip exploit. U. S. Marines and units of the Army’s Eighty First infantry division were in complete ;.,ntrol of Peleliu island in the Palaus (2) except far isolated points. On Angaur, also, the Yanke mopped up. (International)

RED SKELTON

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Esther wiLUlWi BASH Rathbone * BILL Goodwin ETHEl SMITH JEAN PORTER CARLOS Ramirez HARRY * JAMES ■"B Ell MUSIC HJK 111 HIUN XAVIER CUGAT •"V llil "H* UNA »0**' A‘. t w C,

a, o,o.oi >‘ r “,

*♦» M G M P

VONCASTU NEW S and SHOUT BLUE NOSE SCHOONER

WHEN ADM. LORD LOUIS MOUNTBATTEN, right, supreme Allied commander in southeast Asia, returned to Ceylon from a trip to England, he was welromed back by Gen. Joseph Stilwell, commander of U. S. and Chinese forces in northern Burma, who met him at tlie airport. At the meeting, the serious Allied position in China have b'-i-n the c niiviTsiiliun .subject. (International >,

As Yank Bombers Blasted Installations, Ships in Philippines

DKAUNS A POTENT BLOW to Jup Instan&tkWMJUl ships In the I In that Sept. 8 raid. More than 200 enemy planes were destroyed in PbillpiUegfc&J?. NayxMggrs score severalhlts off '^yg^tencl | this attack; Official U. 8. Navy photo. (International Soundphoto)

COVERING ARMY CAMPS AND

SHIPYARDS PILES UP BIG MILEAGE FAST...

I-**' yt-

Sure glad I’ve got a FORD!’

fees

i

"MY WORK FOR THE ARMED SERVICES requires me to keep on schedule without fail. My 1940 Ford has carried me, reliably and comfortably, more than a third of a million miles.”

says A. A. WRIN, Lubrication Specialtst Columbia. South Caroline

“REPAIR COSTS HAVE BEEN NEELIBIBLE — only one major overhauling in lo^r years mid that was after 2 30,000 miles! Naturally 1 boost Ford cars. I’ve owuud three of them."

BEING A LUBRICATION SPECIALIST, I know what neglect can do to any car. With regular Ford Protective Service 1 feel sure my car is good tor 200,000 miles.”

Millions of American* can k 1 * you how their Ford cars •> carried them through thick » “ thin. When new cars can be nu can verify for yourself on ^ street or highway. •' wl ' your assurance that the s' style and performance o ' new Ford will be matched hy enduring thrift and lt» m,n

* *

JEWi NO I k.^—fprd jirpertadjoining tho Willow Run airplane plant, covert more than l,4uu uerts end runvrryt.;. enough to make a two-lane concrJv

"«•’» ..; enoi highway 22 milet long

Hut Us* 30.0011.1101 Ftri Mticury 10O Liicola cjis—iwi Fud Tisikt - ^'

It F It r le li! Is i In r If |r 1 Is r a 1° t t F d G t ( t S c r S t < t I r

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